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From: | "P Maiden" <pmaiden@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Thu, 19 Oct 2000 07:27:24 +1300 |
.......and may they grow into large
pines.
I do not have a direct interest interest
in FFS but no doubt my 'voluntary' contributions to a super scheme are affected.
However an interested observer.
The recent FFS events have been a fiasco. Posts to this forum have blamed
many.
One group who seemed to have been left off the list are the institutional
fund managers. I haven't got a FFS annual report so I don't know who the big
investors are.
One of the main reasons that many NZ companies have destroyed billions of
shareholder value over the past decade or so is that these fund managers have
'passively' sat on the sidelines and not made any of the (poor performing)
companies they invest in accountable for their performance.
Most fund managers (whether passive or active) do not appear to take the
value of any company they invest into account. As long as their own performance
is slightly better than benchmarks and other funds they seem happy. Keep to the
mainstream and mirror other funds - don't get too far out of step as to expose
yourselve to others winning when you are not on the bandwagon seems to be their
motto.
We have heard little what these big investors think about FFS - or what
they are going to do about the rights issue. These fund managers appear to
forget that is not their money they are investing - but a lot of many
indivdual's life savings.
I wonder what these managers are doing - trying to get some value back into
their FFS investment? smile and pay up when the money is due at rights
time? expressing their disgust or whatever (on behalf of their own
investors) to the FLC board.
The impact goes beyond all you small/big investors out there.
Ironically I think a lot of the recent investmnet in FFS also came from the
windfall from FLP.
Peter
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